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Method Article
Here we present a protocol to develop a dominant-negative inducible system, in which any protein can be conditionally inactivated by reversibly overexpressing a dominant-negative mutant version of it.
Dominant-negative (DN) protein inhibition is a powerful method to manipulate protein function and offers several advantages over other genome-based approaches. For example, although chimeric and Cre-LoxP targeting strategies have been widely used, the intrinsic limitations of these strategies (i.e., leaky promoter activity, mosaic Cre expression, etc.) have significantly restricted their application. Moreover, a complete deletion of many endogenous genes is embryonically lethal, making it impossible to study gene function in postnatal life. To address these challenges, we have made significant changes to an early genetic engineering protocol and combined a short (transgenic) version of the Rb1 gene with a lysosomal protease procathepsin B (CB), to generate a DN mouse model of Rb1 (CBRb). Due to the presence of a lysosomal protease, the entire CB-RB1 fusion protein and its interacting complex are routed for proteasome-mediated degradation. Moreover, the presence of a tetracycline inducer (rtTA) element in the transgenic construct enables an inducible and reversible regulation of the RB1 protein. The presence of a ubiquitous ROSA-CAG promoter in the CBRb mouse model makes it a useful tool to carry out transient and reversible Rb1 gene ablation and provide researchers a resource for understanding its activity in virtually any cell type where RB1 is expressed.
Most approaches aiming at the gene and protein ablations rely on permanent processes, which generally lead to the complete elimination or truncation of the gene, RNA sequences, or protein of interest (POI). The overall goal of this method is to engineer a recombinant protein to abolish the function of endogenous, wild-type protein. We have revisited and revamped an alternative strategy1,2, which allows for the temporary ablation of a POI through DN inhibition. This method works for both multimeric and monomeric peptides but is best suited for proteins that function in a multimeric assembly.
The method consists of fusing the lysosomal protease CB to a subunit of a multimeric POI (CB fusion complex). The resultant CB fusion complex can interact with and proteolytically digest the endogenous protein or divert the entire CB-POI complex to the lysosome to be degraded3. Moreover, a combination of the CB fusion complex with the inducible nature of the tetracycline-controlled transcriptional activation (TetO) system allows for an inducible and controlled expression of the transgene in a reversible fashion2. Although useful in many circumstances, the complete deletion of genes or proteins in vivo can result in lethality4,5,6. Likewise, tissue-specific, conditional deletion of some genes or proteins using the Cre/Lox system may not be straightforward, as it will, ultimately, lead to the permanent loss of critical genomic elements7. Therefore, depending on the gene or POI, neither of these approaches will be effective in providing a useful model for subsequent studies, particularly genes' or proteins' functional studies in late postnatal and adult mice.
To circumvent the problems associated with such approaches and provide proof-of-principle on the effectiveness of the proposed method, we have chosen to test the method presented here by generating a conditional DN version of the Retinoblastoma 1 (RB1) protein. Several options have been proposed8,9,10 to abolish the function of endogenous RB1; however, all of them faced some of the same limitations discussed above: permanent germline deletion of RB1 is embryonically lethal, and, consistent with its tumor suppressor role, permanent RB1 conditional deletion leads to a variety of tumors11. Even though a DN version of RB1 does not seem to occur naturally, a better alternative to the currently available strategies should allow for a temporally controlled inactivation of the endogenous RB1 and provide an alternative mechanism to eventually restore its function. The basis for such a construct was described over two decades ago1. However, due to technological limitations, it lacked a mechanism to control transgene activation, response, and tissue specificity. This study is the first to combine the elegance of the doxycycline (Dox)-dependent transcriptional system with an engineered transgenic construct of lysosomal protease CB and Rb1 proteins. The resulting CBRb mouse model allows for a temporarily regulated Dox-mediated RB1 regulation2. The advantage of using such a proteome-based approach to study gene function is that it can be adopted for any gene of interest, with minimal information on its activity.
The proposed DN transgene strategy offers many advantages over traditional approaches. First, DN protein inhibition leads to only a partial ablation in protein activity, thus preserving a residual endogenous expression. Such an outcome is highly desirable in situations where a complete elimination of protein activity leads to embryonic lethality, greatly limiting any investigation to study gene function in a live mouse. Second, the presence of the TetO system enables transgene activation only in the presence of an antibiotic, which allows for an efficient and reversible control of the transgene activity. Thus, by ceasing the antibiotic administration, the transgenic system can be deactivated, and a normal RB1 expression is back in place. Third, the specificity of the transgene expression can vary depending on the promoter of choice. While we have chosen the ubiquitous ROSA-CAG promoter for proof-of-principle, placing the transgene under a tissue-specific promoter is likely to restrict unwanted transgene expression and facilitate studies on the therapeutic application of this transgene methodology.
Generation of the transgenic CBRb mouse and all animal care and experiments associated with the study were approved by the Creighton University Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC) and performed by their guidelines.
1. Transgenic CB-Myc6-Rb1 Construct
NOTE: The cloning of CBRb into a pTet_Splice vector was done in a multi-step process (Figure 1A and 1B).
2. In Vitro Testing of the TetO-DN-CB-myc6-Rb1 Transgene
3. Generation of CBRb+/ROSA-CAG-rtTA+ (CBRb) Transgenic Mice and In Vivo Testing of the DN-CBRb Approach
Generally, designing a DN mutation requires a considerable amount of information on the structure and function of the POI. In contrast, the DN strategy presented here is particularly useful when the structural and functional information for the POI is limited. If the POI is a multimeric protein, a fusion of one subunit to a lysosomal protease can dominantly inhibit the assembled multimer and, potentially, other ligands through a combination of proteolysis of the endogenous subunits and su...
To circumvent the limitations associated with traditional transgenic strategies, we sought to generate a mouse model in which an endogenous POI can be conditionally inactivated by overexpressing a DN mutant form of it in a spatiotemporal manner. To abolish the function of endogenous POIs, several options have been proposed15,16,17. We have modified an earlier genetic strategy1 by combining the Dox-depende...
The authors have nothing to disclose.
The pCS2+CB-Myc6 vector was a gift from Marshall Horwitz (University of Washington, Seattle, WA, USA). The HEI-OC1 cells were kindly provided by Fedrico Kalinec (David Geffen School of Medicine, UCLA, Los Angeles, CA, USA). Technical support was provided by the UNMC Mouse Genome Engineering Core (C.B. Gurumurthy, Don Harms, Rolen Quadros) and the Creighton University Integrated Biomedical Imaging Facility (Richard Hallworth, John Billheimer). The UNMC Mouse Genome Engineering was supported by an Institutional Development Award (IDea) from the NIH/NIGMS, grant number P20 GM103471. The Integrated Biomedical Imaging Facility was supported by the Creighton University School of Medicine and grants GM103427 and GM110768 from the NIH/NIGMS. The facility was constructed with support from grants from the National Center for Research Resources (RR016469) and the NIGMS (GM103427). The mouse lines generated in this study were maintained at Creighton University's Animal Resource Facility, whose infrastructure was improved through a grant by NIH/NCRR G20RR024001. This work received past support through an NIH/NCRR 5P20RR018788-/NIH/NIGMS 8P20GM103471 COBRE grant (to Shelley D. Smith), NIH/ORIP R21OD019745-01A1 (S.M.R.-S.), and an emerging research grant from the Hearing Health Foundation (to S. Tarang). The content of this research is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.
Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
Dulbecco's Modified Eagle's Medium, DMEM | GIBCO-BRL | 11965-084 | |
Minimum Essential Medium Eagle, MEME | Sigma | M8042 | |
Fetal bovine serum | Sigma | F2442 | |
Lipofectamine | DharmaFECT | T-2010-03 | |
Sal I | Roche | 11745622 | |
EcoRV-HF | New England BioLabs | R3195S | |
NotI | Roche | 13090730 | |
CaspaTag | Millipore | APT523 | |
DAPI | Sigma | D9542 | |
Staurosporine | Sigma | S4400 | |
CyQuant NF cell proliferation kit | Invitrogen | C35007 | |
Retinoblastoma 1 antibody | Abcam | Ab6075 | |
c-Myc antibody | Sigma | M5546 | |
b-actin | Sigma | A5316 | |
Ki-67 | Thermofisher scientific | MA5-14520 | |
Phallodin | Thermofisher scientific | A12379 | |
Fluorescence microplate reader | FLUOstar OPTIMA, BMG Labtech | ||
Epifluorescence microscope | NikonEclipse80i | ||
The TetO-DN-CB-myc6-Rb1 (DN-CBRb) mouse line is available from the Jackson Laboratory as JAX#032011. |
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